Unusual uterine bleeding in a patient with breast cancer should alert the gynecologist to the possibility of metastatic breast disease. Furthermore, the metastasis to the uterus and to other organs of the genital tract can be considered as a preterminal event.
Breast cancer is the most commonly occurring cancer in women, with invasive lobular carcinoma being the second most common histologic form. A 78-year-old female patient presented complaining of an enlarged palpable lymph node in the left axilla. Breast ultrasound, digital mammography, and contrast-enhanced spectral mammography (CESM) revealed no abnormal findings. Core needle biopsy of the lymph node revealed infiltrative, diffuse neoplastic growth suggestive of adenocarcinoma, indicating that the primary site should be sought in the breast. The patient underwent mastectomy and the histopathology was suggestive of invasive lobular carcinoma throughout the whole extent of the breast parenchyma. Breast cancer should be definitely included in the differential diagnosis of enlarged axillary lymph nodes, even if there is no other clinical or radiographic presentation of breast disease.
Intrasellar plasmocytoma though rare, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a pituitary mass lesion, since associated with different therapeutic and prognostic implications. Physicians should be alert for intrasellar plasma cell tumors in case of well preserved anterior pituitary function in combination with cranial nerve neuropathies and sellar destruction.
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